Does anyone have pics or videos of girls they been with to share with me I have some to share PM me thanks.
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Does anyone have pics or videos of girls they been with to share with me I have some to share PM me thanks.
[QUOTE=PutNamAnthony;4840761][URL]https://www.cbsnews.com/news/backpage-replacement-cityxguide-taken-down-federal-prosecutors/[/URL][/QUOTE]It's a real drag. That's where all of the Asians used to post. I can't wait to track down which site they start using next. I've had the fever since covid hit, LOL.
My burner has been off due to COVID. Pulled it out and saw this message. Guess what, I am still alive. .
[QUOTE=GordonFreeman;4852040]My burner has been off due to COVID. Pulled it out and saw this message. Guess what, I am still alive. .[/QUOTE]As bad as those "I've hacked your webcam" emails.
[QUOTE=GordonFreeman;4852040]My burner has been off due to COVID. Pulled it out and saw this message. Guess what, I am still alive. .[/QUOTE]Could you share the link of the poster so I can have some fun?
Thanks,
Be safe.
PA.
[QUOTE=PutNamAnthony;4852291]Could you share the link of the poster so I can have some fun?
Thanks,
Be safe.
PA.[/QUOTE]The phone number is in his photo.
Be careful, the number comes up to the same message nationwide in searches. Some of the perps are not as dumb as you'd think and are well organized.
[QUOTE=Woody50;4852689]The phone number is in his photo.
Be careful, the number comes up to the same message nationwide in searches. Some of the perps are not as dumb as you'd think and are well organized.[/QUOTE]I saw the number with 704. I was thinking you called a number on Skg the 704 number was used to scare you. I'll call them with a burner.
Thanks.
Be safe.
PA.
[QUOTE=GordonFreeman;4852040]My burner has been off due to COVID. Pulled it out and saw this message. Guess what, I am still alive. .[/QUOTE]Fantasies that The conj you Out of money thinking you're stupid and scared don't fall for that s*.
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FYI. While anything out in the public is a risk I just wanted to pass along about Metro North. I took the New Haven to Grand Central trip very recently. The rails cars have very few passengers. Everyone was wearing masks. Stay safe everyone.
- Gordon.
This was in today's [URL]CTPost.com[/URL] .
[URL]https://www.ctinsider.com/local/ctpost/article/Task-force-will-scrutinize-human-trafficking-at-15437509.php?cmpid=gsa-ctpost-result&_ga=2.251063109.238034607.1595779557-1394335009.1587480875[/URL]
I'm not so sure I'd hit a spa these days:
A new task force to study human trafficking and prostitution at Connecticut massage parlors will convene for the first time on Tuesday.
The meeting comes after a Hearst Connecticut Media investigation found in February that many illicit massage parlors operate around the state, while police and municipalities struggle to shut them down.
The task force, lead by state Reps. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, and Jillian Gilchrest, D-West Hartford, will make recommendations by the end of the year to the General Assembly on how the state can curb the decadeslong problem.
The National Human Trafficking Resource Center reported a total of 52 unique cases of human trafficking in Connecticut in 2019, a slight decrease from 2018.
The Connecticut Trafficking in Persons Council's 2019 annual report was supposed to contain detailed data on human trafficking cases from the Chief State's Attorney and every municipal police chief, but that information was lost due to email glitches, according to Steve Hernandez, executive director of the state's Commission on Women, Children, Seniors, Equity and Opportunity. As a result, that data will not become public until 2021, Hernandez said.
Trafficking experts worry that the pandemic might cause an uptick in trafficking in 2020.
"Vulnerable people become even more vulnerable during emergencies," Hernandez said. "I can only imagine we are seeing that with trafficking as well. ".
On the internet, it is easy to find graphic reviews from people who claim to have bought sex services at Connecticut massage parlors. Around the country, police often use these review boards, including a website called Rub Maps, as one source of information when investigating possible prostitution and human trafficking crimes.
Hearst Connecticut reviewed 10 years of police records for 30 massage parlors with user "reviews" posted on Rub Maps. As of Jan. 6, the site identified 98 massage parlors in 47 towns where anonymous reviewers claimed to have engaged in sexual acts.
Based on investigations from Connecticut's Department of Labor and the counter-trafficking nonprofit Polaris, there are 250 illicit massage businesses operating in Connecticut at any given time, the state Trafficking in Persons Council said in its 2018 annual report.
Sometimes these businesses make trafficked individuals to engage in prostitution by withholding their immigration papers, forcing them into debt or using physical violence. Connecticut police have identified evidence of women living at some massage parlors around the state, police records show.
Police records also indicate that stamping out prostitution can be a decades-long battle for local law enforcement. A Hearst Connecticut investigation found that police records show businesses suspected of prostitution often continue to operate.
Prostitution arrests mostly focus on the female employees of massage parlors, not the johns patronizing them. These arrests are often an insufficient tool for combating the sex trade, police said.
Police often say they lack resources to back rigorous investigations into prostitution and human trafficking. But only a small fraction of fees from prostitution convictions meant to support those investigations are being collected by the state, the Trafficking in Persons Council said.
Instead, many towns and cities are turning to civil statutes as a way to fight back, writing into their local ordinances zoning requirements, licensing regulations and inspections that increase oversight of the businesses. The result is a patchwork of local laws that sometimes just shifts offending massage parlors over town lines into less regulated municipalities.
[QUOTE=SROnly;4900153]This was in today's [URL]CTPost.com[/URL] .
[URL]https://www.ctinsider.com/local/ctpost/article/Task-force-will-scrutinize-human-trafficking-at-15437509.php?cmpid=gsa-ctpost-result&_ga=2.251063109.238034607.1595779557-1394335009.1587480875[/URL]
Police records also indicate that stamping out prostitution can be a decades-long battle for local law enforcement. [/QUOTE]Just one comment.
"Stamping out prostitution" is an impossibility. This "battle" has been going on for much longer than decades. Demand for sexual services is such that it always finds a way. All this can accomplish is to make the business more dangerous for both the seller and the buyer.
And, as always, no evidence of whether or how much actual trafficking is involved.
[QUOTE=MrMike1952;4900633]Just one comment.
"Stamping out prostitution" is an impossibility. This "battle" has been going on for much longer than decades. Demand for sexual services is such that it always finds a way. All this can accomplish is to make the business more dangerous for both the seller and the buyer.
And, as always, no evidence of whether or how much actual trafficking is involved.[/QUOTE]All the battle ever does is push it down darker and darker and make it more dangerous for the girls and further violent trafficking. Just legalize it already.
[QUOTE=MadPlaid;4901097]All the battle ever does is push it down darker and darker and make it more dangerous for the girls and further violent trafficking. Just legalize it already.[/QUOTE]I don't think that will ever happen. People forget this is a country built on "religion". Right now churches are divided on gays, trans people and all that jazz. If you want to see them unite try to legalize this thing. There's a lot of ambiguity in the bible but pretty much "jezebels" are hated on throughout the book. If that were to ever happen, the conditions would have to be perfect. The woman movement maybe has the best chance since they are headed for an eventual clash with religious institutions. But then, you would have to have a judge with the balls to make a decision to legalize it on the basis of "women can do whatever they want with their bodies. " Also the judge really can't have balls because only a female judge would be able to get away with it. And that judge would have to put up with a lifetime of violent harsassment from the church and far right maniacs. I mean, constant stalking, death threats and picket lines. She would have to put her entire life, her family life, and career on the line for the kind of women who probably made fun of her for being smart in high school. I can't see that happening.
250 illicit massage businesses operating in the state? Dammit!! Who's been holding out on the info!?
[QUOTE=SROnly;4900153]This was in today's [URL]CTPost.com[/URL] .
[URL]https://www.ctinsider.com/local/ctpost/article/Task-force-will-scrutinize-human-trafficking-at-15437509.php?cmpid=gsa-ctpost-result&_ga=2.251063109.238034607.1595779557-1394335009.1587480875[/URL]
I'm not so sure I'd hit a spa these days:
A new task force to study human trafficking and prostitution at Connecticut massage parlors will convene for the first time on Tuesday.
The meeting comes after a Hearst Connecticut Media investigation found in February that many illicit massage parlors operate around the state, while police and municipalities struggle to shut them down.
The task force, lead by state Reps. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, and Jillian Gilchrest, D-West Hartford, will make recommendations by the end of the year to the General Assembly on how the state can curb the decadeslong problem.
The National Human Trafficking Resource Center reported a total of 52 unique cases of human trafficking in Connecticut in 2019, a slight decrease from 2018.
The Connecticut Trafficking in Persons Council's 2019 annual report was supposed to contain detailed data on human trafficking cases from the Chief State's Attorney and every municipal police chief, but that information was lost due to email glitches, according to Steve Hernandez, executive director of the state's Commission on Women, Children, Seniors, Equity and Opportunity. As a result, that data will not become public until 2021, Hernandez said.
Trafficking experts worry that the pandemic might cause an uptick in trafficking in 2020.
"Vulnerable people become even more vulnerable during emergencies," Hernandez said. "I can only imagine we are seeing that with trafficking as well. ".
On the internet, it is easy to find graphic reviews from people who claim to have bought sex services at Connecticut massage parlors. Around the country, police often use these review boards, including a website called Rub Maps, as one source of information when investigating possible prostitution and human trafficking crimes.
Hearst Connecticut reviewed 10 years of police records for 30 massage parlors with user "reviews" posted on Rub Maps. As of Jan. 6, the site identified 98 massage parlors in 47 towns where anonymous reviewers claimed to have engaged in sexual acts.
Based on investigations from Connecticut's Department of Labor and the counter-trafficking nonprofit Polaris, there are 250 illicit massage businesses operating in Connecticut at any given time, the state Trafficking in Persons Council said in its 2018 annual report.
Sometimes these businesses make trafficked individuals to engage in prostitution by withholding their immigration papers, forcing them into debt or using physical violence. Connecticut police have identified evidence of women living at some massage parlors around the state, police records show.
Police records also indicate that stamping out prostitution can be a decades-long battle for local law enforcement. A Hearst Connecticut investigation found that police records show businesses suspected of prostitution often continue to operate.
Prostitution arrests mostly focus on the female employees of massage parlors, not the johns patronizing them. These arrests are often an insufficient tool for combating the sex trade, police said.
Police often say they lack resources to back rigorous investigations into prostitution and human trafficking. But only a small fraction of fees from prostitution convictions meant to support those investigations are being collected by the state, the Trafficking in Persons Council said.
Instead, many towns and cities are turning to civil statutes as a way to fight back, writing into their local ordinances zoning requirements, licensing regulations and inspections that increase oversight of the businesses. The result is a patchwork of local laws that sometimes just shifts offending massage parlors over town lines into less regulated municipalities.[/QUOTE]